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*rkurSilay, April 6, 1933 s* McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK. SOUTH CAROLINA f'MJ.fL iMHWBER FOUR I am prepared to / take care of your fertilizer needs with the best fertil izers at very.lowest prices. PAUL R. BROWN McCormick, S. C. McCormick To Have Clean Up Week In order that the town of Mc Cormick may provide its citizens with more sanitary conditions by cleaning up, painting, grubbing and general beautification of streets, parks and public grounds, now, therefore, I, C. K. Epting, Mayor of McCormick, do hereby proclaim the week of April 10-15 as clean up and beautification week and I urge all citizens and their tenants to co operate with town authorities and the relief council on the above date'. 1 urge that all citizens co-operate ; in cleaning up their own property, placing rubbish on side of streets and town scavenger trucks will re move same. C. K. EPTING, Mayor. x Newberry Students or Renovation Biease Announces That He Will Run For Governor In 1934 Pay F< aj STOPS A/eadac/ie j There seems to be no safer way to ' <ead a headache—and there certainly : •.is no safer way—than two tablets of * Ba\ rcr Aspirin. ' You’ve heard doctors say Bayer I Aspirin is safe. If you’ve tried it, you ; jknow it’s effective. You could take : these tablets < , every day in the year , 'without any ill effects. And every •time you take them, you get the idesired relief. ; ) Stick to Bayer Aspirin. It’s safe. .It sets results. Quick relief from 1 headaches, colds, or other sudden 'discomfort. WANT ADV. POR SALE—100 bushels Appier Seed Oats at 40 cents per bushel; Coker’s No. 5 Cotton Seed at 35 cents per bushel. L. C. Talbert, Rt. 2, Troy, S. C. FOR SALE—Some good mules* cheap. Jamie L. Smith, McCor mick, S. C. PLANTS FOR SALE — Tomato Plants—Baltimore, M&rglobe, Red Beauty. Sweet Potato Plants— Triumph, Porto Rico, Nancy Hall and Big Stem Jersey, all $1.00 per 1000. Cabbage Plants— Charleston, Jersey, Succession and Copenhagen Market. Onion Plants—White and Yellow Ber muda, all 50 cents per 1000. Pep per Plants—Bull Nose and Ruby King, $2.00 per 1000. Send re mittance for prompt shipment Dorris Plant Co.. Valdosta, Ga. FOR SALE—Good sound ear corn at 60 cents per bushel; oats at 37 1-2 cents per bushel at my house; you furnish bags. T. A. Dowtin, Rt. 1, Troy, S. C. MEN WANTED for Rawleigh Routes of 8G0 Consumers in City of Mc Cormick, parts of counties Ab beville, Greenwood and McCor mick. Reliable hustler can start earning $25 weekly and increase every month. Write immediate ly. Rawleigh Co., Richmond, Va., Dept. SC-D-33-S. BATTERIES FOR ALL LIGHT CARS $6.65 WHITTLE BATTERY SERVICE BROAD PHONE 11M 4UGUSTA, ga: NEWBERRY, April 4.—Acting on their own initiative, students at Newberry College have recently contributed funds to finance no ticeable improvements on the cam pus. The young women of the Phil- omathian Literary society donated from their treasury surplus money with which to renovate complete ly the entire second floor of Keller Hall, where the Library is located. New shelving, reading tables and lighting equipment have also been added. The entire student body con tributed funds with which to ren ovate the corridors in Hollland Hall and to repaint the large columns in front of the building. President James C. Kinard, in commenting on these voluntary contributions of the students, said: “This fine work is just another evidence of the splendid spirit that exists in the student body at New berry College. I can think of. no more worthy contribution that our students could make than to pro vide the funds for these projects.” Friends in town have donated shrubbery, which Ls now being set out on the campus.. The gifts'i'n- clude grass, new trees and orna mental plants of many varieties. Two new tennis courts have just been completed. The men and women have separate courts, and there are many aspirants out for the tournament to be staged soon. txr EXAMINATION FOR TRANSPORTATION RATE CLERK (PASSENGER) The United States Civil Service Commission will accept applica tions until April 25 for the position of transportation rate clerk (pas senger) to fill a vacancy in the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. The salary is $2,000 a year, less a deduction not to exceed 15 per cent as a measure of economy, and a retirement deduction of 3 1-2 per cent. Applicants must have had at least three years of experience in positions in which the duties per formed required them to become thoroughly conversant with vari ous passenger rates, c passenger tariffs, rules of the Interstate Com merce Commission, etc., at least two years of which must have in volved the distribution of passenger revenues between carriers on through traffic and the determina- L ion of proper deducticns on ac count of land-grant laws. Appli cations will not be accepted from persons who fail to show the re quired two years of experience. Full information may be obtain ed from the Secretary of the Unit ed States Civil Service Board of Examiners at the post office in any city which has a post office of the first or the second class or from the United States Civil Service Com mission, Washington, D. C. tXt Public Sales Here Monday Judge J. F. Mattison, master, con ducted sale at the court house here Monday morning as follows: Mrs. Lucy E. Dukes, individually and as administratrix of the Estate of A. V. Bussey, deceased, vs. Em erson Bussey. 135 acres, to Emerson Bussey, for $700.00. 85 acres, to Em erson Bussey, for $125.00. 2 1-2 acres, to W. K. Charley, attorney, for $50.00. An undivided one-half interest in 8 acres, to W. K. Charles, attorney, for $200.00. Six tracts of land offered by J. T. Fooshe, tax collector, were bid in by the county. Settlement was made before salesday on fhe Mrs. Mattie B. Watson land and the Clara Guillebeaux land. COLUMBIA, April 1.—Cole L. Blease, perennial warhorse of South Carolina politics, today announced he will make the race for governor in 1934. The former governor and United States senator said at his law of fice here that his platform “will be the simple policy of operating the state government on a cash basis.’ He said many persons told him they believed he could “pull the state out of its present financial situa tion.” Blease said he decided to become a candidate at the “request of peo ple from all over the state who have never supported me,” adding “prominent men who have never voted for me have urged me to run.” Active in South Carolina politics for 43 years, Blease served in both chambers of the legislature, as gov ernor from 1911 through 1914, and as United States senator from 1924 through 1930. He was born in Newberry county October 8, 1868. Advent of Blease in the guber natorial lists brings the total of announced candidates to four, with others in the immediate back ground. Olin D. Johnston of Spartanburg, whom Governor Blackwood narrow ly defeated in 1930, Lieut. Gov. James O. Sheppard of Edgefield and Representative Wyndham M. Manning of Sumter are avowed candidates. W. H. Keith of Greenville was quoted in a recent dispatch from Greenville as saying he would enter the race if his health permitted, and C. E. Sloan, state senator from Greenville, is considered a probabk* aspirant. X Duke Endowment Funds Allocated CHARLOTTE, March 29.—Alloca tion of $843,397.67 to hospitals, or phanages and child-placing ag encies in the two Carolinas from funds of the Duke endowment has been announced here after a meet ing of the trustees in New York city. Hospitals numbering 98 received $696,048 and 46 other institutions were awarded a total of $147,349.67. The trustees said application had been received from 148 institutions. The trustees said this alloca tion brought to $6,967,219.73 the amount provided for hospitals and orphan homes in the Carolinas since the endowment was establish ed by the late James B. Duke, to bacco magnate, December 11, 1924. Hospitals received $6,008,365.95 of the total. The followng is a list showing the name, location and amount ap propriated to a few of 89 hospitals granted assistance in Soi/th Car olina by the trustees of the Duke endowment. Abbeville County Memorial hos pital, Abbeville, $1,609. Anderson County Hospital, Anderson, $6,406. Brewer hospital, Greenwood, $3,010. Camden hospital, Camden, $6,782 Columbia hospital, Columbia, $14.- 267. Greenville City hospital. Greenville, $16,046. Greenwood hos pital, Greenwood, $1,524. Dr. Peek’s hospital, Six Mile $5,- 487. St. Francis hospital, Greenville $2,320. Shriners’ Hospital for Crippled Children, Greenville, $22,- 708. South Carolina Baptist hospi tal, Columbia, $13,582. Working Benevolent Society hospital, Green- vijle, $1,907. The orphan homes assisted, with the amount contributed to each institution, appear in the follow ing list: Alexander school. Union mills, $3,642.09. Bruner Home Greenville, $1,113.21; Camden Children’s home, Camden, $334.36; Carolina Orphans’ home, Columbia $1,032.99; Charleston Orphan home Charleston, $4,334.28; Children’s Home, Sumter, $1,270.23; Church Home Orhpanage, York, $3,090.41; City Orphan Asylum, Charleston $1,465.36; Connie Maxwell Orphan age, Greenwood, $7,797.22; Epworth Orphanage, Columbia, $8,964.29; Jenkins Orphanage, Charleston, $4,563.88; Dr. John De la Howe In dustrial school, McCormick, $3,930.- 24; Juvenile Protective Association Greenville, $346.78; Spartanburg County Orphanage, Spartanburg, $1,257.89; Thorn well Orphanage, Clinton, $8,793.77; Wilkinson’s Home for Orphans, Columbia, $270.88; Williamson Orphan home, Columbia, $597.96. X The human heart is a hard working engine, which beats nor mally about 40,000,000 times a year. Better Quality Sweets A Production Problem COLUMBIA, April 1.—South Car- o’uia sweet potato producers who insist that they have no production problems at present, and that their L .roub!es arc all marketing, may be convinced to the contrary, thinks George E. Prince, chief of the Ex- ension Division of Markets, by a study of the marketing facts and figures below. On March 15, the Cleveland Dailj Market Report showed U. S. No. 1 bushels of Porto Rico jobbing ar follows: South Carolina, 65 cents; North Carolina, 75 cents-35 cents; Louisiana, $1.00-$1.10; Texas, $1.15. Assuming that the freight rate from all states was equal, the South Carolina grower probably received a net of 12 1-2 cents per bushel for his Porto Ricos, while the Texas grower received a net of 65 cents per bushel. The Pittsburgh market report of March 21 carried the following: Porto Rico sweet potatoes, bushels, U. S. No. 1’s, Louisiana, $1.15; Tex as, $1.15-$1.25; South Carolina, 65 cents. Here again a striking dif ference in net return after freight allowance. “This stock was all pink skin Porto Ricos, but the difference was in the cleanliness, brightness, and manner of grading and packing,” says Mr. Prince, who insists that South Carolina does not give suf ficient attention to these matters or to improving color and type of stock. One reason for this may be that most growers consider sweet potatoes as a side line, and do not give any consideration to their marketing problem until time for selling. Realizing that the problem in largely one of production rather than of marketing, Mr. Princa sug gests these pointers on production for market quality: 1. Select disease-free stock and treat before bedding. 2. Select stock of the right color and shape. 3. Plant in light soil if possible in fields which have not been in potatoes for three or four years. 4. Use proper fertilizer, with necessary potash to produce stocky potatoes. 5. Plant closely to reduce per centage of large potatoes. 6. Harvest carefully when ma ture and before frost. 7. Cure and store only number one stock. 8. Regrade and clean before shipping. tXT Brood Poults Like Chicks CLEMSON COLLEGE, April 1.— Experiments and practices have shown that poults can be raised best when fed just like baby chicks and brooded in partial confinement on clean ground, separate from the chickens, says P. H. Gooding, ex tension poultryman, giving brief suggestions on handling turkeys. The popular notion that turkeys must have half the farm on which to range to prevent blackhead and must be fed some specially prepar ed feed is unfounded, Mr. Gooding thinks. Chickens are carriers of the germs that cause this disease but seldom develop it. Turkeys, however, are more susceptible and when allowed to run with the chickens they usually develop i f when the poults are six to 12 week:; old. A good practice is to keep the poults confined on ground where chickens have not ranged for two years, keeping them in the house for the first 10 or 12 days. If hens are used to brood the poults, abou 4 30 should be given to each hen and these confined in small wire en closures which can be moved to new ground every two or three weeks Seme good chick starter should be kept before the poults for the firs’ 10 or 12 weeks; then cracked yel low corn hopper-fed in addition tc the mash until they are large •■nough to eat whole yellow corn. A good starter mixture is 8C rounds of yellow corn meal, 4C }? runds of wheat middlings, 20 pounds of meat scraps, five pounds r' dried buttermilk, and 1.4 pounds rf salt. If milk is available the dned buttermilk may be omitted. At the University of Michigan it ' as found that poults make a lit- 1 'c faster growth when fed a high er protein ration than this, say : 1 pounds of meat scraps, or 10 pounds of buttermilk. However, if the market next fall demands a imall turkey as it did last fall, it would not be wise to increase the protein content of the ration to stimulate growth, because this practice increases the cost of the ration and also the cost per pound of meat produced. Bordeaux News Quite a number of young people •irnrised Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Mit- Thell with an “April fool” party last Saturday night. Various games were played and all seemed to cn- ?oy the evening. Mr. Guilford Hawes spent the >art week with Mr. and Mrs. G. W. ^nde. Mis? Eaves and Mr. Walter Eaves, with a young man and young lady ’’riend of Flb^rfon. Ga.. sr>er*t las* Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. F South. Miss Lettie May South returned with them for a visit. We had services at the Methodist Church Sunday evening. The young people of the Epworth League con ducted the devotional part of the services. A number of the De la Howe school young neople were present and several of the young 'adies favored us with a song. Af ter this Rev. Strickland gave us an appropriate sermon on youth. Mr. Carlton Lindley spent the past week end in Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. S. E. Moragne and Miss Cora Moragne were business visitors in McCormick last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Cade. Miss Aileene Lindley and Mrs. W. G. Mitchell were shoppers in McCor mick Saturday afternoon. Mrs. P. B. Parnell, Mrs. L. A. Hoffman and Miss Helen Strick land were shopping in Augusta last Monday. Mr. A. S. Cade and Mr. Wilbur Link were in Abbeville on business Tuesday. t\t Thrifty Recipes For Tasty Meats Tasty meat dishes may be pre pared in many ways. Here are the recipes for the meat dishes in this week’s low-cost menus suggested by Inez S. Willson, home economist. Roast Pork Shoulder Have a fresh picnic shoulder trimmed and skinned at the mar ket. Wipe it with a damp cloth sprinkle it with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Place the roast fat side up on a rack in an open roasting pan v/ithout adding any water. Put it in a hot oven (480 degrees Fahrenheit) and sear for thirty minutes, or until lightly browned. Then reduce the tem- nerature very quickly to a moderate heat (300-325 degrees Fahrenheit) and continue cooking until the meat is done, allowing thirty min utes per pound. Do not cover the roaster nor add any water during the cooking process. Beef Loaf 11-2 pounds ground beef. 2 onions. 1 cup fine bread crumbs. 1 egg. 1 cup tomato juice. Salt and pepper. Mix all the ingredients together thoroughly, adding enough tomato juice to moisten well. Pack into a well-greased loaf pan and bake in a moderate oven for an hour and a half or two hours. Braised Stuffed Breast of Lamb 1 lamb breast. 1 onion, minced. 4 tablespoons fat. 2 cups bread crumbs. 2 tablespoons flour. Salt and pepper. Have a pocket made in the lamb breast. Wipe the meat with a damp cloth. Sprinkle with salt and pep per. Fry the onion in the fat un til it is nicely browned; then add the bread crumbs, and season with salt and pepper. Mix well. Fill the pocket with the dressing. Tie to hold dressing in place. Melt fat in a roasting pan, and brown the meat in it. Add i cup of bell ing water, cover closely, and cook in a moderate oven until tender. Beef Fot-roast With Vegetables 3 pounds beef chuck. 6 small carrots. 6 small onions. 6 potatoes. 3 tablespoons fat 2 tablespoons 1 1-2 teaspoons 1-8 teaspoon p Wipe the meat cloth. Dredge w son with salt an the meat on Add 1 cup ho simmer slowl a half hours of cooking, a round meat wit serving. ThickS kettle. Southe 2 cups chopper 4 or 5 raw potatoes. 2 medium sized onions. 1-2 cup tomatoes. 1 cup meat stock. 4 tablespoons lard. Salt. Pepper. Put vegetables through chopper. Melt the fat in a irying pan and add the vegetables with stock and cook until the potatoes are done, keeping it covered and stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. Then add chopped: meat and season well with salt and. pep er. Heat through and serve hot. Baked Stuffed Heart 1 pork heart. 1 cup bread crumbs. 1-2 onion, finely chopped. 3 tablespoons bacon drippings Stock or water. 1-4 teaspoon celery salt. 1 teaspoon salt. 1-4 teaspoon pepper. Season the bread crumbs witi* onion, salt, pepper, and celery sait* Moisten with stock or water ii'> which bacon drippings have fteevr melted. Cut out any hard parts of the heart and wash it thoroughly. Dry and stuff with dressing. Place it in a casserole with a little water, cover closely, and baxe in a. slovr oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) un til it is tender, about three: bourse Lamb Stew 2 pounds lamb. 4 tablespoons lard. 6 small carrots. 6 potatoes. 6 small onions. 1 teaspoon salt. 1-8 teaspoon pepper. Have meat cut into pieces suit able for stewing. Brown the pieces, on all sides in a kettle containing: hot lard. Add boiling watter- andf simmer until the meat is- tender. Cut the carrots into lengthwise pieces and add them, together ^ithe the potatoes and onions, about for ty-five minutes before sewing. Serve attractively arranged on a hot platter, with the meat in the center and the vegetables in at tractive groups around it. Braised Liver 2 pounds beef liver. 4 or 5 bacon slices. 4 tablespoons flour. 1 teaspoon salt. 1-8 teaspoon pepper. Wipe the liver with a damp cloth and remove any membrane.. Place in a baking dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper and flour. * Pour 1 cup boiling water over the meat, cover and bake in a moderate oven (3b0> degrees Fahrenheit) until it is tender, about two hours. During the last twenty minutes of cooking, remove the cover and lay several thin slices of bacon over the liver and continue cooking without cov er until the bacon is crisp and the liver is browned. x fST 7/ ° ttu Patricia Davr <» ’-»»>>»—««««— For Spring there issno material more attractive than brightly printed crepes, so to those planning C Jf\s *1(0^ FAS. nmi For A PATTERN, size 14. 16, 18, 20. 40. or 42, send I5c in coin, your NAME. ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER, and SIZE to Kay Boyd. !03 Park Avenue. New York. Complete and simple sewing chart with each pattern. a food new frocks we suggest the choice < a slenderizing frock like the or above, which has smart lines but very simply and inexpensive made. Buttons and pointed details c the blouse are repeated on tl modish sleeves, while a softly draj od collar in white or some othi c*vitrasting color is a smart fas! i note. Size 16 of this simple and attrai live Kay Boyd model requires 2 !• yards of 54-inch material. Colli and tie requires 1-3 yard, 35 inchi wide..